D.HYGEN builds tension into basics. The shoulder seams are deliberately externalized, raised above the fabric surface. The contrast topstitching runs along shoulders and sleeves — visible construction that maps the garment's structure rather than hiding it. You feel the seams before you see them — fingertips catch the raised thread, the slight ridges where fabric meets fabric.
The charcoal tone shifts the relationship. Where black creates stark opposition against the stitching, this warm stone grey absorbs it — the contrast thread feels like an organic part of the garment rather than an intervention. Japanese cotton jersey is smooth, matte, breathable. The hemline drops longer at the back, a rounded asymmetric gesture where most t-shirts simply end. Architectural tailoring translated into a pullover.






